The Luck of the Mounted

Ralph S. Kendall
The Luck of the Mounted

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Kendall
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Title: The Luck of the Mounted A Tale of the Royal Northwest
Mounted Police
Author: Ralph S. Kendall
Release Date: May 30, 2005 [eBook #15940]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LUCK
OF THE MOUNTED***
E-text prepared by Al Haines

THE LUCK OF THE MOUNTED
A Tale of the Royal Northwest Mounted Police
by
SERGEANT RALPH S. KENDALL
Ex-Member of the R.N.W.M.P.
Grosset & Dunlap Publishers New York
1920

This truest of stories confirms beyond doubt, That truest of
adages--"Murder will out!" In vain may the blood-spiller "double" and
fly, In vain even witchcraft and sorcery try: Although for a time he may
'scape, by-and-by He'll be sure to be caught by a Hue and a Cry! --THE
INGOLDSBY LEGEND

TO
MY OLD COMRADES
PRESENT, AND EX-MEMBERS OF THE
R.N.W.M. POLICE
THIS WORK IS DEDICATED WITH EVERY KIND THOUGHT

CHAPTER I
_O sing us a song of days that are gone-- Of men and happenings--of
war and peace; We love to yarn of "th' times that was" As our hair
grows gray, and our years increase. So--revert we again to our ancient
lays-- Fill we our pipes, and our glasses raise-- "Salue! to those stirring,
bygone days!" Cry the old non-coms of the Mounted Police._
MEMORIES
All day long the blizzard had raged, in one continuous squalling
moaning roar--the fine-spun snow swirling and drifting about the
barrack-buildings and grounds of the old Mounted Police Post of L.
Division. Whirraru!-ee!--thrumm-mm! hummed the biting nor'easter
through the cross-tree rigging of the towering flag-pole in the centre of
the wind-swept square, while the slapping flag-halyards kept up an
infernal "devil's tattoo." With snow-bound roof from which hung huge
icicles, like walrus-tusks, the big main building loomed up, ghostly and
indistinct, amidst the whirling, white-wreathed world, save where, from
the lighted windows broad streamers of radiance stabbed the
surrounding gloom; reflecting the driving snow-spume like dust-motes
dancing in a sunbeam.
Enveloped in snow-drifts and barely visible in the uncertain light there
clustered about the central structure the long, low-lying guard-room,
stables, quartermaster's store, and several smaller adjacent buildings
comprising "The Barracks." It was a bitter February night in South
Alberta.
From the vicinity of the guard-room the muffled-up figure of a man,
with head down against the driving blizzard, padded noiselessly with

moccasined feet up the pathway leading to the main building. Soon
reaching his destination, he dived hastily through the double
storm-doors of the middle entrance into the passage, and banged them
to.
Flanking him on either side, in welcome contrast to the bitter world
outside, he beheld the all-familiar sight of two inviting portals, each
radiating light, warmth, and good fellowship--the one on his right hand
particularly. A moment he halted irresolutely between regimental
canteen and library; then, for some reason best known to himself, he
steadily ignored both, for the time being, and passing on began slowly
to mount a short flight of stairs at the end of the passage.
Sweet music beguiled each reluctant step of his ascent: the tinkle of a
piano accompaniment to a roaring jovial chorus from the canteen
assuring him with plaintive, but futile insistence just then, that--
_Beer, beer! was glorious beer, etc_.
Reaching the landing he paused for a space in an intent listening
attitude outside the closed door of a room marked No. 3. From within
came the sounds of men's voices raised in a high-pitched, gabbling
altercation.
Turning swiftly to an imaginary audience, his expressive young
countenance contorted into a grimace of unholy glee, the listener flung
aloft his arms and blithely executed a few noiseless steps of an
impromptu war-dance.
"They're at it again!" he muttered ecstatically.
Some seconds he capered thus in pantomime; then, as swiftly
composing his features into a mask-like expression, he turned the
handle and entered. On the big thermometer nailed outside the
Orderly-room the mercury may have registered anything between
twenty and thirty below zero, but inside Barrack-room No. 3 the
temperature at that moment was warm enough.

Two men, seated at either end Of a long table in the centre of the room,
busily engaged in cleaning their accoutrements, glanced up casually at
his entrance; then, each vouchsafing him a preoccupied salutory
mumble, they bent to their furbishing with the brisk concentration
peculiar to "Service men" the world over. As an accompaniment to
their labours, in desultory fashion, they kept alive the embers of
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